The Blurred Space: Reading the Body Politic in Christos Tsiolkas’s The Slap and The Jesus Man

Article


Walsh, Pete. 2022. "The Blurred Space: Reading the Body Politic in Christos Tsiolkas’s The Slap and The Jesus Man." Journal of Australian Studies. 46 (1), pp. 31-44. https://doi.org/10.1080/14443058.2021.2021969
Article Title

The Blurred Space: Reading the Body Politic in Christos Tsiolkas’s The Slap and The Jesus Man

ERA Journal ID34876
Article CategoryArticle
AuthorsWalsh, Pete
Journal TitleJournal of Australian Studies
Journal Citation46 (1), pp. 31-44
Number of Pages14
Year2022
PublisherRoutledge
Place of PublicationAustralia
ISSN0314-769X
1444-3058
1835-6419
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1080/14443058.2021.2021969
Web Address (URL)https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14443058.2021.2021969
Abstract

The politico-historical settings of Christos Tsiolkas’s novels The Jesus Man (1999) and The Slap (2008) compromise the expressions of self manifested by his transcultural characters. The failure of Howard-era multicultural policies combines with the economic rationalising of the culture wars and the xenophobic hysteria spread by Pauline Hanson’s One Nation Party to haunt those marginalised by the Eurocentricity of Australian culture. As a result, the transcultural characters of The Jesus Man are forced to externalise an augmented version of their performative selves, compromised as they are by such cultural homogenisation; in The Slap, the failure of neoliberal multicultural policies manifests in the anxieties experienced by the characters. The characters of both novels are forced to confront these sociocultural, historical and psychological conflicts in a space laden with historical tensions, cultural erasure and political uncertainty. This article argues that Tsiolkas’s real-world fictional settings problematise the performance of his multicultural characters in ways that unsettle hegemonic constructions of Australian culture. In particular, I contend that from this tension, a blurred space emerges that offers a way forward for transcultural subjects: it is a liminal space in which cultural syncretism is encouraged, cultural performance is delimited, and hegemonic cultural norms are mitigated.

KeywordsChristos Tsiolkas; transcultural literature; Australian literature; cultural theory; multiculturalism; blurred space
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Byline AffiliationsSchool of Humanities and Communication
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